Tycoon denies racism after 'coloured' tenants ban from homes due to curry smells

Digital reporter

A property tycoon who banned "coloured" tenants from renting his homes because he claims they make them smell of curry has insisted he is not racist.

Fergus Wilson, 69, said it was an "economic decision" made after he was left thousands of pounds out of pocket from ridding a home of curry smells.

Mr Wilson, long regarded as Britain's biggest buy-to-let investor with hundreds of properties in Kent, faced a backlash after an email surfaced setting out his ban to a letting agent.

The email, leaked to The Sun newspaper, listed his requirements for potential tenants, including: "No coloured people because of the curry smell at the end of the tenancy."

Mr Wilson said he "probably must have said" what was in the email, and that he would send it again to avoid being saddled with the cost of removing curry smells from one of his homes.

He said: "The problem is the smell gets in the carpets, particularly the bloody carpets. It's the cost of re-carpeting, which in a decent detached house can be rather expensive.

"So all your profits for maybe a year or more is now going on new carpets."

He added: "If that makes me racist, that makes 99% of people who buy houses racist.

"How many white people are going to go into a house that smells of curry and are going to buy the house? They are just going to walk away like me and not make an offer."

Mr Wilson, who has also banned plumbers from renting his homes after claiming he had been ripped off in the past, said he was happy to rent to "negros" as "they haven't generated a curry smell at the end of the tenancy".

But he was "wary" of letting to Indians after losing more than £12,000 in rent and re-carpeting costs over a six-month period because one of his properties smelled of curry.

Mr Wilson went on: "I have taken an economic view, not a racist view. And I'm saying I believe 99% of other British people would do precisely the same."

In a competitive housing market where demand for rental properties outstrips supply, Mr Wilson said: "There are more people that want the properties, so why have the headache of this afterwards?"

He added it was difficult to recoup the cost of ridding a property of curry smells.

He said: "The other thing is when you start pursuing people through the courts, the judge will say to you, 'Right, where's the photograph?'